Intermingled
[,ɪntə'mɪŋgəld]
Examples
- The latter is not motivated and impregnated with a sense of reality by being intermingled with the realities of everyday life. John Dewey. Democracy and Education.
- These fields were intermingled with woods of half a stang, {301} and the tallest trees, as I could judge, appeared to be seven feet high. Jonathan Swift. Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World.
- A dozen dead and dying men rolled hither and thither upon the pitching deck, the living intermingled with the dead. Edgar Rice Burroughs. Tarzan of the Apes.
- Somewhere between central Europe and western Asia there must have wandered a number of tribes sufficiently intermingled to develop and use one tongue. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- Various exhortations, or relations of experience, followed, and intermingled with the singing. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Uncle Tom's Cabin.
- I found the island to be all rocky, only a little intermingled with tufts of grass, and sweet-smelling herbs. Jonathan Swift. Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World.
- They intermingled very confusingly. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- Behind the musicians came lads garlanded with wreaths of intermingled violets and ivy, bearing thyrsi. Fergus Hume. The Island of Fantasy.
- She felt she was sinking into one mass with the rest--all so close and intermingled and breathless. D. H. Lawrence. Women in Love .
- This is the effect of the intermingled causes, which are requisite to our forming any calculation concerning chances. David Hume. A Treatise of Human Nature.
Typed by Jody